Issue


Featured Articles

America’s True Power

Author: John Lukacs

At a time when many are concerned by the nation’s loss of the unassailable economic position it occupied just after World War II, one historian argues that our real strength and our real peril lie elsewhere.

The Shocking Blue Hair of Elie Nadelman

Author: Cynthia Nadelman

He ignored the conventions of his day and became one of the greatest American sculptors of this century.

The New Deal and the Guru

Author: J. Samuel Walker

How Franklin Roosevelt’s Secretary of Agriculture sent an eccentric Russian mystic on a sensitive mission to Asia and thereby created diplomatic havoc, personal humiliation, and embarrassment for the administration.

The First 1040

Author: Nancy Shepherdson

75 years ago, Americans paid their first income tax. And liked it.

The Secret of the Soldiers Who Didn’t Shoot

Author: Fredric Smoler

Slam Marshall, who is regarded as one of our great military historians, looked into the heart of combat and discovered a mystery there that raised doubts about the fighting quality of U.S. troops. But one GI thought he was a liar…

The South’s Inner Civil War

Author: Eric Foner

The more fiercely the Confederacy fought for its independence, the more bitterly divided it became. To fully understand the vast changes which the war unleashed on the country, you must first understand the plight of the Southerners who didn’t want secession.

When Hollywood Makes History

Author:

President Wilson said that “The Birth of a Nation” was “like writing history with Lightning.” Movies have taught everybody else history, too.